Publication | Closed Access
Using Game Theory and Strategic Reasoning Concepts to Prevent and Detect Fraud
146
Citations
27
References
2004
Year
Fraud DetectionCurrent Auditing StandardsBehavioral Decision MakingGame TheoryDetect FraudAccounting PracticeFraud ExaminationBehavioral Game TheoryFinancial Statement Fraud DetectionAuditingNon-cooperative Game TheoryManagementStatic Game TheoryAudit QualityStrategic Reasoning ConceptsFinancial AccountingDecision TheoryMechanism DesignFinancial CrimeAudit Market StructureFraudulent Financial ReportingAccountingStrategyGamesAudit OversightAccounting PolicyBusinessAudit RegulationAccounting AuditGame Confrontation
This commentary examines academic research that can assist auditors in detecting and preventing fraudulent financial reporting. We review theoretical and empirical research from game theory, social psychology, judgment and decision making, and auditing to identify improvements in audit practice and promising areas for future research. This review focuses on the strategic fraud setting and suggests modifications in auditing standards that should facilitate auditors' use of strategic reasoning in this setting. We emphasize three critical audit tasks—fraud risk assessment, audit planning, and audit plan implementation—and recommend changes to current auditing standards and identify potential research questions for each task.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1